:D best
:D best
please bridge your accounts to fed bsky people. bsky.app/profile/ap.b...
<3 this is gorgeous
A black-and-white illustration depicting caregiver fatigue. A man, shown cracking and breaking apart, holds a limp woman who is melting into black liquid that drips onto the ground. The image symbolizes emotional exhaustion and the toll of caring for someone struggling or fading away.
The image say "They’ve learned how to keep going even when they’re running on empty. How to smile when their body feels like a collapsing bridge. How to say, “I’m fine,” when what they really mean is, “I’m exhausted, but I don’t have the choice to stop.” Caregiving has a strange way of erasing the self. The focus is always on someone else, on their needs, their pain, their comfort. And somewhere in between the medication schedules, the check-ins, and the long nights, they forget what it feels like to be a person with needs of their own. They don’t ask for help. They’ve been doing this too long to believe help will come. So they keep moving, quietly, steadily, as if holding the world together through sheer will. Everyone tells them how strong they are, but strength, they’ve realized, sometimes isn’t a gift."
The image says "There are moments, in the stillness of late nights, when the truth surfaces. They are tired, not just in body, but in soul. Tired of always being the one who holds steady when everything else shakes. Tired of pretending that patience is endless. Tired of giving from a cup that’s long been empty. And yet, they continue. Not out of heroism, not even out of hope, but out of love, the kind that demands everything. They carry on because they must. Because the world they’re holding up would crumble if they didn’t. They know it’s breaking them, slowly, silently. But still, they show up. Still, they care. Still, they love. And somehow, that has to be enough."
Made a humble attempt to make art and write something on caregiver fatigue/burnout.
www.instagram.com/p/DQLOYT8Eg1...
#caregiverfatigue #caregiverburnout #caregiver #chronicillness #art #mentalhealth
Both sides are not the same. Go with the side that will let you protest.
Question for #infoviz and #dataviz practitioners. Do you make a distinction between the two? is there a meaningful difference? Or are there conventions here that need to be followed?
#EMNLP has a nice set of tokenization/subword modeling papers this year.
It's a good mix of tokenization algorithms, tokenization evaluation, tokenization-free methods, and subword embedding probing. Lmk if I missed some!
Here is a list with links + presentation time (in chronological order).
Fellow neurospicy folks, what’s your secret sauce to manage dystrgulation?